Monday, September 29, 2025

The Black Hand in America: an in-depth look

The following is an article that ChatGPT created when I wanted to learn more about the "Black Hand" history in the United States. The reason for this research is because I've recently was shared some newspaper articles about a distant cousin who was killed by the "Black Hand." I'll write more later about this individual.


Black Hand” (Italian: Mano Nera) was not a single centralized mafia organization but a widely feared extortion method used by criminal actors — often immigrants from southern Italy and Sicily — across U.S. cities from roughly the 1890s through the 1920s. It terrorized Italian-American neighborhoods, fed nativist headlines, drew major law-enforcement responses, and helped shape the public image of the “Italian mafia.” Encyclopedia Britannica+1

  • What was the “Black Hand”?

“Black Hand” refers primarily to a style of extortion: anonymous, threatening letters demanding money and signed with ominous symbols (a black handprint, dagger, skull, or other menacing drawing) and often explicit threats of arson, kidnapping or murder if the demand wasn’t met. Because the same technique appeared in many cities and victims and notes sometimes used similar imagery, newspapers and some police reports presented the Black Hand as though it were a single, conspiratorial society — an impression that outlasted the phenomenon itself. Wikipedia+1

Key point: the “Black Hand” was a tactic (extortion by terror), not always an organized crime syndicate with a unified leadership. Small cells, lone operators, Camorra crews, and Sicilian Mafia members all sometimes used the same tactic. Wikipedia+1

  • Origins and cultural context

Old-world roots: Extortion by threatening letters and symbolic intimidation had precedents in southern Italy (Neapolitan Camorra and Sicilian criminal practices). Immigrants brought not only people but social practices and criminal opportunity structures to crowded American cities. chicagocop.com+1

 U.S. entry points: Black-Hand extortion became visible in dense Italian neighborhoods: New York (especially Little Italy and East Harlem), Chicago’s Near North Side and immigrant wards, New Orleans and other cities with large southern-Italian immigrant populations. The phenomenon peaked in the pre-Prohibition years (approx. 1890s–1920s). Encyclopedia Britannica+1

 Why it spread: Rapid immigration, ethnic enclaves, language barriers, suspicion of authorities, and small-business wealth (shops, money sent back to relatives in Italy) made immigrants both attractive targets and sometimes reluctant witnesses. Sensational newspaper coverage amplified fear and sometimes exaggerated the size of Black-Hand “organizations.” Gang Rule+1

  • Methods and signature behavior

Typical elements of Black-Hand extortion letters and campaigns:

      • Anonymous delivery of notes demanding money, often with a deadline.
      • Menacing imagery — the eponymous “black hand” drawing, daggers, smoke, or blood — meant to convince victims the threats were real.
      • Threats of arson of premises, harm to family members, or murder, sometimes accompanied later by violent acts if demands were ignored.
      • Use of intermediaries or “collectors” to take payments, and occasional torture or murder to enforce compliance or revenge. Encyclopedia Britannica+1

Law-enforcement agencies of the era found investigation difficult: letters were anonymous; victims were often scared of retaliation or distrustful of police; and investigative techniques (forensics, coordinated federal resources) were less developed than later in the 20th century. Postal inspectors, municipal police “Italian branches,” and later federal agents all played roles in combating the racket. United States Postal Service+1

  • Notable figures and cases

Lieutenant Joseph Petrosino (NYPD): Petrosino created an “Italian Squad” in the NYPD to investigate crimes in Italian neighborhoods, focused on extortion, counterfeiting, and Mafia activity. In March 1909 he travelled covertly to Sicily investigating trans-Atlantic criminal links and was assassinated in Palermo — a murder that became a cause célèbre and symbolized the perceived reach of Italian organized crime. Petrosino’s work and death dramatically raised public awareness of the problem. Wikipedia+1

Giuseppe “the Clutch Hand” Morello and allied groups: Early Sicilian crime bosses in New York (e.g., Morello, Ignazio Lupo) operated in neighborhoods where Black-Hand extortion was practiced; the Morello gang and other early families later evolved (or were succeeded by) the New York Mafia families known from later decades. These early bosses were involved in varied crimes, including extortion, loan-sharking, and counterfeiting. Wikipedia+1

High-profile investigations and convictions: A number of local prosecutions, Chicago and New York “Black Hand” squad actions, and federal/secret-service interventions produced convictions in the 1900s–1910s, though historians note that many arrests were local and the degree of centralized control by a single “Black Hand Society” was often overstated. Office of Justice Programs+1

  • Law enforcement response and decline

Specialized units: Police departments formed special units (e.g., NYPD’s Italian Squad) to investigate extortion in Italian communities; postal inspectors and later federal agencies also intervened because many threats involved mail or crossed state lines. United States Postal Service+1

Investigative limits: Early policing lacked modern forensic capabilities and faced language/cultural barriers; journalists sometimes sensationalized the problem; the Italian consulate also protested stereotyping and conducted its own inquiries. Gang Rule+1

Why it faded: By the 1920s the specific, high-visibility “letter terror” of the Black Hand waned as criminal activity changed: organized crime consolidated into more structured mafia/camorra organizations, Prohibition created vastly more profitable illicit markets (bootlegging) that shifted criminal focus from small-scale extortion to larger, enterprise-style rackets, and policing/federal coordination improved. In short, Black-Hand tactics were absorbed into—and overshadowed by—modern organized crime. Wikipedia+1

  • Myths, media and the “Black Hand” label

The term “Black Hand” became a rhetorical shortcut in newspapers and by some officials: it summed up a public fear of organized crime among Italian immigrants but also encouraged stereotyping and conflation of distinct groups. Scholarly work has stressed that:

      • Many acts labelled “Black Hand” were local, opportunistic extortion crimes rather than evidence of a monolithic trans-Atlantic conspiracy.
      • The image of a single secret society fit sensational press narratives and reinforced nativist biases of the era. Office of Justice Programs+1
  • Legacy
The Black-Hand era helped shape American perceptions of Italian immigrants and provided some of the early templates (threat letters, protection rackets, symbolic intimidation) that later organized crime adapted.

 It also stimulated institutional responses: specialized police squads, more attentive federal involvement (e.g., postal inspectors), and international investigations. The public and law-enforcement reaction to the Black Hand shaped later approaches to organized crime in the U.S. throughout the 20th century. United States Postal Service+1

  • Conclusion

The “Black Hand” must be understood as a historically specific set of extortion methods that flourished in the shadow of mass immigration, ethnic enclaves, sensational journalism, and early modern urban policing. While it contributed to the hardening public image of an “Italian mafia” in America, historians emphasize that the phenomenon involved many small operators and groups rather than a single, all-powerful transnational society. Its decline in visibility by the 1920s coincided with the rise of larger, more organized criminal enterprises and changes in policing and social conditions.


References and further reading

(Selected primary and scholarly sources consulted)

  • Encyclopedia Britannica, “Black Hand” (American criminal extortion). Encyclopedia Britannica

  • Wikipedia, “Black Hand (extortion).” (useful overview and references). Wikipedia

  • U.S. Postal Inspection Service — history spotlight: “Black Hand Gang.” (description of extortion-by-letter and postal involvement). United States Postal Service

  • Pitkin, T.M., Black Hand — A Chapter in Ethnic Crime. (Office of Justice Programs / NCJRS abstract). Office of Justice Programs

  • Lombardo, R.M., “The Black Hand: Terror by Letter in Chicago” (article). Office of Justice Programs

  • Joseph Petrosino biography and accounts of his 1909 assassination (NYPD Italian Squad; see Petrosino entries and scholarly articles). Wikipedia+1

  • Morello family / early New York Mafia histories (Giuseppe Morello; background on gangs that used extortion). Wikipedia+1

  • JSTOR and academic articles on Italian immigrant crime and urban policing in early 20th-century America (e.g., Nelli; archival papers). JSTOR+1


Wednesday, September 24, 2025

The Meaning of Misseri and the history behind the surname

The following details have been translated from the Facebook group, "ORIGINE DEI COGNOMI ITALIANI" which posted the details about the Misseri surname on 3 July 2017. 


Misseri appears to be Sicilian, with a lineage in Palermo and Carini (PA), and a secondary lineage in Rosolino and Pachino in the Siracusa area of Sicily, with presences in Puglia and Tuscany. It is thought to derive from the term "messere" and its dialectal modifications. In the late Middle Ages, this term was used to identify individuals who held prominent positions such as notaries, judges, and doctors, or wealthy landowners.




Before you read any further, our surname was originally "Lo Misseri" from about the late 1400s to the middle 1700s. Might find a few instances even into the 1780s. After that the "Lo" was dropped because it was probably just easier to write "Misseri." I've looked at enough records from the town of Carini and the area around it, to know that many names morphed over time and one of my guesses for the reason why, is because paper was at such a premium. They were trying to write as much as they could on as little paper as possible, and if that meant dropping a few letters here or there, it probably made it easier for the priest who was keeping the records. And I just want to make it clear, that at this point in history, I have found no evidence that links the two groups of Misseri's in Sicily together. There have been no DNA connections what-so-ever with anyone from the Siracusa area. And there are many Misseri's from the Siracusa area that live in and around the state of Connecticut in the United States. 


WHOSE SON ARE YOU? LET'S TALK ABOUT THE PATRONYMIC PARTICLES DI, DE, LO, LA, ETC.

In Italy, surnames didn't all originate at the same time: for centuries, people were identified by their father's name, nicknames, professions, etc. Hence the patronymic surnames, those that embody the memory of an ancestor, with the patronymic particle that we often confuse as a feudal predicate, thinking it conveys a certain nobility... almost always nonexistent!

Their function is precisely patronymic or origin, therefore "son of" or "coming from".

Here are some of the most common particles:

🔹 Di/De/D'

It means "son of" or "descendant of" or even "those of".

Di Marco, Di Stefano, De Luca, De Angelis, D'Amico, D'Andrea, D'Antonio, D'Elia, etc.

🔹 Da/Dal/Dalla/Della/Del

More typical of the North, with exceptions such as Del, they could indicate geographic origin or affiliation.

Dal Maso (from the Master), Dalla Chiesa, Da Vinci, Dalla Libera, Della Zanna, Del Carlo, etc.

🔹 Lo/La/Li

In the South, separate particles are found, always with the same function, such as:

Lo → Lo Monaco, Lo Russo, Lo Verde, Lo Misseri

La → La Rocca, La Spina, La Porta

Li → Li Vecchi, Li Voti, Li Causi

These particles derive from the Latin ("ille", "illa") and have been preserved in dialect, becoming true surnames.

Curiosity

Sometimes the particles have been dropped due to errors or simplifications: Di Marco → Marco or Di Federico → Federico

In other cases, they have been transformed by being added to the surname, as often happens with Apulian, Lucanian, and Sicilian surnames: De Luca → Deluca, De Vito → Devito, etc.


Thanks for staying with me regarding this little bit long article. AND thanks to the wonderful ORIGINE DEI COGNOMI ITALIANI" Facebook group.

Friday, August 1, 2025

Missing Misseri: Francesco Paolo Vito Misseri

Francesco Paolo Vito Misseri was baptized on 8 Oct 1766 in the town of Carini. Francesco was born to the parents of Carlo Lo Misseri and Filippa Agata Pisano.

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Misseri's living on via Misseri


While going the Carini - 1886 Birth records on FamilySearch, I discovered something for the first time that relates to my original surname, Misseri. I found a Salvatore Misseri (record #261) who was born at the street address of via Misseri, 33. Yes, this is the first time I have found a family with the last name of Misseri who lived on via Misseri in Carini, Palermo, Sicily, Italy. Salvatore's parents are Vito Misseri and Maria di Maria.

Missing Misseri's in 1871



As I continue to dig through the records of Carini, the birth records of1871 reveled three new individuals with the Misseri surname. If you are doing Carini genealogy research, be sure to add these people to your tree. But today was the day that these three distant cousins wanted to be found. Let's not forget them as history has for the last 153 years.
  • Vito Misseri, born on 4 January 1871 to Croce Misseri and Teresa Scavo, record #5
  • Teresa Misseri, born on 20 August 1871 to Angelo Misseri and Crocifissa Purpura, record #149
  • Cesare Misseri, born on 1 September 1871 to Salvatore Misseri and Anna Lo Geloso, record #231

Researching Italian Genealogical Records

The primary research I am conducting at this time is Italian and it centers around two main areas: Carini (just outside of Palermo, Sicily) and Modugno / Grumo Appula (just outside of Bari, Puglia).

I am very lucky to have roots in Italy because FamilySearch has done a wonderful job of filming church records and state civil documents, which are available on FamilySearch and/or on the Italian government site: Antenati.

As someone who doesn't know Italian or Latin, it has been a learning experience to train my brain how to access and read the records. Let me just say, if I can do it, anyone can do the same. It just takes a little practice and dedication.

If you are new to Italian records, please take a look at these three blog posts from Fortify Your Family Tree:

The instructions are fantastic because they really give you everything you need to read and understand what is being told to you in the Italian records.




By the way, a big "thank you" to DiAnn Iamarino Ohama for the wonderful blog: Fortify Your Family Tree.

In addition to the Italian research, I also work on French-Canadian, English and Hungarian/Slovakian genealogy. It is a real mixed bag of places around the world. But all these places that are researched, just makes me a bit more worldly (even if it is just from the living room couch). More to come about these other places.


Saturday, March 22, 2025

Missing Misseri's in 1886

Today I was looking at the FamilySearch records for Carini, Palermo, and I have found two missing Misseri's that no online family tree has in their databases. They are:

  • Anna Misseri, born on 21 July 1886 to Cesare Misseri e Domenica di Lisi, record #244
  • Isabella Misseri, born on 2 September 1886 to Antonino Misseri e Francesca Pizzo, record #291

It's really interesting how people can be lost in history. But not anymore for these two individuals who wanted to be found today, they are being remembered, probably for the first in 138 years.

On this day: June 15th

On this day, June 15 , in... ... 1799 , Stefano Rosalino Giovanni Misseri was born in Palermo, Palermo, Sicily, Italy. ... 1877 , Adelaide ...